‘We need to make this place more famous, and film is the way to do that.’
Blockbuster filmmaker Michael Bay wants to see Miami’s movie and TV businesses booming like they did decades ago.
A new county incentives program is expected to help that happen.
In a one-minute video posted to X, Bay lauded Miami’s weather, sights and variety. All factored into his moving to the city in 2006, 11 years after his debut film, “Bad Boys,” hit theaters.
Bay, who also directed the film’s sequel and the true crime-inspired “Pain & Gain” in Miami, said the city deserves to have more ongoing productions than it does today.
“I love shooting here because it’s got amazing kinds of locations. It’s got amazing light. Things are very close. And the breadth of different types of locations in a short amount of time is pretty great,” he said.
“I’ve had a really successful time here. There’s a reason why we need to make this place more famous, and film is the way to do that. It reaches the world. So, it’s very important that we keep this film industry nurtured here and bring it back.”
Bay’s video was posted online by FilMiami, Miami-Dade’s film and entertainment office, which got a boost this year after County Commissioners approved a new rebate program to attract productions to the area.
Miami-Dade is already home to more than 200 film production companies, 15 soundstages, 15 recording studios, three Spanish-language production facilities and many small businesses that support the industry, according to the office of Commissioner René Garía.
Local universities like Miami Dade College have made “a lot of investments” in educating future filmmakers, he told Miami Today in January.
“We want to make sure that the students stay (here),” he said.
To that end, and to grow the area’s film industry, García successfully sponsored a resolution in December to create the Miami-Dade High Impact Film Fund Program. Over the next five years, it will provide $5 million to $10 million in yearly rebates to big-ticket film and TV productions shot in the county.